Review by JayRaams -- Divine Simplicity Day 3...Unity In...
- JayRaams
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Review by JayRaams -- Divine Simplicity Day 3...Unity In...
Divine Simplicity Day 3...Unity In The Community is a conspiracy theory book. It begins with a pamphlet on parenting and communicating with children. Then the author Yasher Echad El starts to put forth his perceptions of what he calls truths. The focus of the book is predictive programming, the idea that movies, books, and music are used by the elite to condition people, to accept ideas and events before they happen. The author gives some examples of events that he thinks demonstrates the theory. There are also a few other conspiracy theories in the book. Throughout the book there are Bible verses and antidotes about a man, that went by Dr. Sebi. At the end of the book, the author Yasher talks about his own life and his plans to write his next book. The book ends with lined pagers for the reader to take notes.
The best-written and most engaging part of the book is the pamphlet on parenting, titled Make Time Every Day written by Cynthia Martin El. Yasher is clearly passionate about his writing and has self-published two books before this book and intends to publish more.
The book feels very self-published. It has a blurry authors photo and paragraphs that often drift off without concluding their thoughts. From the title Divine Simplicity Day 3...Unity In The Community and the author's description of the book, I thought the book was an essay on the author's opinions on how to heal and build stronger communities, having studied Community Service this interested me. The book however had nothing to do with building communities, instead it focused on the author's conspiracy theories. Overall, the book was unpleasant to read. It pushed transphobic ideas, for example the author calls trans people abominations and implies that trans people are dangerous. There is also antisemitism in the book, the author claims that Jewish people are cannibals and that they sell human meat to McDonald’s. Yasher gives no evidence for this claim. Yasher also promotes the work of a fake doctor, who was a scam artist that promoted miss information about AIDS as well as claiming to cure every disease. For these reasons I believe Yashers book crosses the line from bad to dangerous.
I rate this book 1 out of 4 stars because Yasher’s writing is confusing and because he does not add anything new to the theory of predictive programming. Instead using the theory to promote hateful and dangerous ideas.
I don´t think people who like conspiracy theories would even enjoy this book. Hence, I would not recommend this book to anyone, due to its hateful message and unengaging writing style.
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Divine Simplicity Day 3...Unity In The Community
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